Universities Face New Cheating Challenges from Smart Glasses and Wearable Tech
Universities Face New Cheating Challenges from Smart Glasses

The University of Sydney launched an investigation earlier this month into allegations that miniature spy cameras were used to record and distribute exam content online. Simultaneously, the United Kingdom's national examinations regulator warned that smart glasses, smartwatches and concealed earpieces are emerging threats for universities.

Regulator Sounds Alarm on Wearable Tech

Sir Ian Bauckham, chief regulator of qualifications in the UK, noted that technology was “changing fast”: “There are smartwatches that we are increasingly seeing on young people and they are fully internet connected […] And I understand that in the pipeline there are even things like smart glasses.” University administrators have traditionally regarded in-person, invigilated exams as the most reliable way of ensuring students do not cheat, but the rise of these new wearable technologies could undermine this approach.

A New Generation of Cheating Tech

Cheating in examinations is not new. Students have long relied on handwritten notes, information hidden on clothing, or materials accessed during bathroom breaks. In 2022, a Spanish law student gained media attention after engraving tiny notes onto plastic pens for an exam years earlier. However, new types of wearable technology are changing how students can cheat. Among the most significant developments are AI-enabled smart glasses with built-in microphones and cameras. These can display AI-generated text, process spoken language and analyse written materials, and can be hard to distinguish from everyday glasses. Research suggests even when images captured by smart glasses were blurry and warped, AI could still extract enough information to answer some exam questions correctly.

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Alongside covert recording devices, micro earpieces are also available, allowing answers to be relayed to candidates. Screen-enabled pens can also display and generate text, allowing users to access notes while appearing to use a normal pen. Smartwatches remain a cheating risk, as they can store notes, display text discreetly, and in some cases connect to other devices, the internet and AI chat functions. As a 2026 paper by Australian researchers noted, transparent wearable AI – particularly AI-enabled smart glasses – are difficult for exam invigilators to detect.

How Widespread Is the Issue?

We do not yet have robust data on Australian usage of smart devices for cheating. But in the United Kingdom, the exam regulator reported 2,225 cases involving mobile phones and smart devices for tertiary and senior school exams in 2025, accounting for 44.3% of all cheating cases. China is also grappling with the issue. This month, its Ministry of Education warned bringing smart devices to exams, including smart glasses, counts as cheating. Numerous Chinese provinces introduced tighter exam security measures, including mandatory inspections of candidates’ glasses, manual checks and a wider rollout of smart security gates – electronic screening checkpoints that detect banned devices. In Japan, covert recordings in 2024 prompted universities to take stricter security measures for exams.

What Can Australian Universities Do?

In Australia, some universities have banned smart devices in supervised exams. However, smart devices cannot be addressed through traditional invigilation alone. Universities need to update policies to explicitly address smart glasses, AI earbuds and other wearable technologies. Invigilators require training to recognise devices, such as thick-framed smart glasses, active indicator lights, concealed earpieces and screen-enabled pens. Universities may also need to consider having exam rooms monitored by device screening technology, and secure storage procedures for prohibited items. While such systems involve upfront costs, they are already being used in China, suggesting the technology is commercially available and operationally feasible in universities.

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Other Changes Needed

Assessment design also needs to evolve. Exams that focus primarily on memorisation are more vulnerable to cheating than those requiring critical thinking, problem-solving and application of knowledge. Universities should also improve systems to collect data on technology-enabled cheating, allowing policies to be guided by evidence. At the same time, institutions must avoid creating inequitable surveillance practices. Intensive scrutiny of glasses and hearing aids and what students are wearing may discriminate against students with disabilities, chronic health conditions and religious dress requirements. Universities face the challenge of balancing academic integrity with inclusion and accessibility.

Undermining Academic Integrity

If students are cheating on exams and universities do not realise, the consequences extend beyond individual cases of misconduct. Public trust in university qualifications may be weakened. As the UK regulator noted, “you end up with grades for qualifications which are no longer reliable, no longer trustworthy.” The challenge for higher education is not simply preventing cheating. It is ensuring assessment remains valid, credible and equitable in a world where AI and other technology is increasingly embedded into everyday devices and learning.